According to EBRI, more than half of U.S. households possess less than $25,000 in savings and investments when their homes and pensions are excluded from the picture.

Many have no pension to consider in the first place, as the trend of extending these benefits is evaporating. And those that are so lucky to receive them better watch out.

“Whether you know it or not someone is busy trying to figure out how to screw you out of your pension,” Siedle writes. He warns that those funds may not survive as long as those receiving them.

He considers 401(k)s, which were marketed as placing people's futures in their own hands, as a great experimental disaster. Siedle, who was once employed as mutual fund legal counsel, said the way retirement funds were sold to working Americans is “almost laughable — if the results were not so tragic.”

The financial status of Americans is so grim that EBRI said if an unexpected need for $2,000 arose in the next month, only half of U.S. households could find the money.

And, though there is much focus on Social Security and its importance to the aging, it is often overlooked that these benefits were designed to be supplemental income.

Whereas many interpret a crisis as a flood of tragedy, Siedle said the problem for retirees would come in “waves.”

As we are already seeing, many older people have had to return to work because they either could not afford the costs of living or they need employer-subsidized healthcare. Others realize they need more money so they work longer, considering themselves to be postponing retirement. But many Americans have put ideas of retirement aside and plan to work as much as they can for as long as they can.

In the end, most people will end up in the same boat, according to Siedle — with deteriorating health, a lack of employment opportunities and insufficient funds.

“Too frail to work, too poor to retire will become the new normal” for the majority of the nation’s elders, he explains, noting that the problem will be too big for the nation to ignore.